That really depends on the definition of a "computer". The usual story that computer scientists learn in their introductions is Charles Babbage, who devised a "Difference Machine" to count polynomials, which however, was not yet constructed in his time.
Another "first" was Konrad Zuse's finished in 1938, which was the first programmable computer.
Yes because there could be a better idea plus fredom of speach
1800 1 60515
1810 1 96373
1820 1 123706
1830 1 202589
1840 1 312710
1850 1 515547
1860 1 813669
1870 1 942292
1880 1 1206299
1890 1 1515301
1900 1 3437202
In September 1931, they claimed Chinese soldiers had sabotaged the railway, and attacked the Chinese army (which had just executed a Japanese spy) The Chinese army did not fight back because it knew that the Japanese were just wanted an excuse to invade Manchuria
<span>The correct answer is François-Dominique Toussaint Louverture. He was the most famous leader of the Haitian revolution and worked together with Jean-Jacques Dessalines to ensure that Haitian people were given their freedom from colonizers. He fought all three of the great colonizing forces, the Spanish, the French, and the Britain, sometimes multiple at once.</span>